Thursday, June 6, 2013

David Beckham to might comeback in football with Indian Super League

David Beckham has been approached about making a sensational soccer comeback in India, which could see him pocket £1 million.

David Beckham is in talks about making an instant return to playing soccer - in India.

The 38-year-old star - who announced his retirement from the sport last month - has been approached about joining a new franchise-based league of eight teams, which would run from January 14 to March 13, and experts believe he could earn £1 million for two months' work.

A source told The Sun newspaper, "Basically Becks can charge whatever he wants. What he would do for the league in terms of international interest and publicity is priceless."

The former England captain has been approached about playing in the Indian Super League - a soccer version of the IPL cricket league - alongside his former England teammate Michael Owen and Spanish star Raul.

Since hanging up his boots last month following the end of the season with French champions Paris Saint Germain, David has been linked to a number of new careers, with movie mogul Harvey Weinstein tipping the soccer star to be a hit in Hollywood.

He said, "David can be anything he wants, including becoming a movie star. He doesn't need any advice from me, he can do anything he wants."

"I've known about David for many, many years, way before he even joined the [Los Angeles Galaxy soccer team].

"I have only met David a few times but each time I find his talents more and more impressive. I am a real fan. I think he could do anything he wants in TV and film."

David has also admitted he is keen to invest in a US soccer club and earlier this month, Brad Pitt said he would love the newly-retired hunk to give his children - Maddox, 11, Pax, nine, Zahara, eight, Shiloh, six, and four-year-old twins Knox and Vivienne - personal soccer lessons.

He told BANG Showbiz: "I want him to teach my kids soccer."

Source : IndiaToday

Amazon now in India

Online retailer Amazon launched its India marketplace, ‘Amazon.in’, on Wednesday, offering books, movies and television shows for sale.

According to industry watchers, it notched up nearly 10,000 orders on the first day of operations.

In this current marketplace model however, Amazon will not own any merchandise sold but will act as platform for any retailer who wishes to sell his products.

“Our vision is to become a trusted and meaningful sales channel for retailers of all sizes across India, enabling them to succeed and efficiently grow their business online,” said Amit Agarwal, Vice-President and Country Manager, Amazon India.

To start with, Amazon.in has over 12,000 movie and television titles and 7 million book titles for purchase. It plans to expand soon into categories such as cameras and mobile phones.

The company’s top executives met Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma some months ago and discussed the creation of a favourable policy environment for Amazon to do business, which is otherwise not allowed in India.

Hurdles side-stepped

The new marketplace model allows the company to sidestep regulatory hurdles that prevent foreign retailers from owning an Indian arm for direct sales.

Source : TheHindu

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Indian scientist at MIT raises hope of creating artificial human liver

Sangeeta Bhatia pioneered one of the first successful methods for sustaining functional liver cells outside the body, devised a novel way to create tiny colonies of living human liver cells that model the full-sized organ. The work could allow better screening of new drugs that are potentially harmful to the liver and reduce the costs associated with their development.

Liver toxicity is one of the main reasons pharmaceutical companies pull drugs off the market. These dangerous drugs slip through approval processes due in part to the shortcomings of liver toxicity tests. Existing tests rely on liver cells from rats, which do not always respond to toxins the way human cells do. Or they rely on dying human cells that survive for only a few days in the lab.

The new technology arranges human liver cells into tiny colonies only 500 micrometers (millionths of a meter) in diameter that act much like a real liver and survive for up to six weeks.

Bhatia and HST postdoctoral associate Salman Khetani describe their model liver tissue and its behavior in the most recent issue of Nature Biotechnology.

To build these model livers, Khetani uses micropatterning technology - the same technology used to place tiny copper wires on computer chips - to precisely arrange human liver cells and other supporting cells on a plate. Khetani adapted this method from Bhatia's early work as an HST graduate student building micropatterned co-cultures of rat liver cells and supporting cells.

Such precisely arranged cells results in what Bhatia calls a "high-fidelity tissue model" because it so closely mimics the behavior of a human liver. For example, each model "organ" secretes the blood protein albumin, synthesizes urea, and produces the enzymes necessary to break down drugs and toxins.

To predict how close their model tissue is to real liver tissue, which has over 500 different functions, they also evaluated its gene expression profiles, measures of the levels of gene activation in the tissues. They found that these profiles are very similar to those of fresh liver cells, "giving us confidence that other [liver] functions are preserved," said Khetani.

For drug testing purposes, this affinity to the human liver allows each colony to provide a window into the human liver's response to a drug without having to expose human patients to the drug in a clinical trial, said Bhatia.

Further, because the engineered tissue lives for so long, it has the potential to make new types of toxicity tests possible. For instance, it opens the door to testing the effects of long-term drug use akin to taking one pill a day over multiple weeks. It also will allow more extensive testing of drug-drug interactions.

In addition to being a good biological model, the engineered tissue is designed to be seamlessly integrated into an industrial pharmaceutical science setting.

To mass-produce plates of the miniature liver models, Khetani relies on a technique called soft lithography. This technique fashions a reusable micropatterned rubber stencil from a silicon master. Each stencil contains an array of 24 wells, and each well contains a matrix of 37 tiny holes. Khetani "peels and sticks" the stencil onto plates and places the liver cells into the holes, patterning over 888 miniature model livers across the microwells in a matter of minutes.

In tests of drugs with a range of well-known toxicity levels, assays (chemical detection tests) on the miniature liver models showed the expected levels of toxicity. "Our platform was able to predict the relative toxicity of these drugs as seen in the clinic," said Khetani. For instance, troglitazone, a drug withdrawn from the market by the FDA due to liver toxicity, showed toxicity levels much higher than its FDA-approved analogues, Rosiglitazone and Pioglitazone.

The model uses a fraction of the costly human liver cells used in other test platforms and can be assembled using frozen cells. Moreover, the expanded toxicity testing capabilities have the potential to allow drug developers to identify toxicity earlier in the development process, thereby avoiding the expense of investing in formulas that are bound to fail.

A startup company called Hepregen has licensed the technology and is working to introduce it into the pharmaceutical marketplace.

"My hope is that this new model will make drugs safer, cheaper, and better labeled," said Bhatia.

Early this year Bhatia made headlines for her work in developing extremely tiny particles that mimic blood platelets -- a feat of engineering that someday could dramatically change cancer treatment.

"We've been interested in making nanoparticles that can detect tumors and deliver chemotherapy locally," says Bhatia. "Some people call it analogous to the movie "Fantastic Voyage" in which a submarine is miniaturized and injected into the bloodstream of a human body. "The idea sounds fantastical, but the technologies are there to do it."

Bhatia's Laboratory for Multiscale Regenerative Technologies is trying to build microscopic particles that can repair and rebuild human tissue. Nanoparticles that mimic blood platelets are capable of homing in on tumors, then clumping around them. Potentially, the particles could coagulate into a big enough clot to choke the blood supply to the tumor, or they could deliver a payload of drugs, or they could help send an image to an MRI machine.

"In the next five years we expect to have these particles homing, carrying, and imaging," says Bhatia.

In addition to cancer applications, her lab is researching therapies for liver disease, specifically by developing in vitro models to study liver cells -- a tricky proposition, since the liver is so complex. Nanotechnology is now allowing them to construct models that will help test clinical drugs.

"All drugs are metabolized in the liver," says Bhatia. "We hope to make drug tests safer." Lastly, Bhatia's lab constructs miniature devices that can be used to conduct biological experiments in an efficient, simple way. "They're chips that look like microscope slides, and they allow you to do lots of experiments at once."

The innovation, reported by Bhatia in the Nov. 15 online issue of Advanced Materials, could lead to the improved diagnosis and targeted treatment of cancer. Bhatia and colleagues have shown that magnetic nanoparticles heated by a remote magnetic field have the potential to release multiple anticancer drugs on demand at the site of a tumor, according to a study published in the journal Advanced Materials. Moreover, say the investigators who conducted this research, these same nanoparticles can do double duty as tumor imaging agents.

Earlier this year, the team led by Bhatia developed injectable multi-functional nanoparticles designed to flow through the bloodstream, home to tumors and clump together. Clumped particles help clinicians visualize tumors through magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Said Christopher Chen, a professor of bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania, Bhatia "has a unique gift. There are still exceedingly few scientists that can cross between technological and biomedical fields with such fluency."

After taking a joint medical degree and PhD at Harvard and MIT, Bhatia earned her professorial wings teaching bioengineering at UC San Diego until 2005 when she moved back home to be the director of her own laboratory at MIT.

Being a role model for women aspiring to engineering careers is a source of pride for Bhatia. "I want young girls to think that engineering is great. A lot of them don't make a connection between this profession and their iPods. I want girls to know that you can make an impact and still have a life. I tuck my girls in at night. I take vacations. It's not an unattainable goal."

Bhatia's research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health's National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, the MIT Deshpande Center, and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation.

Source : INDOlink

MIT to help Andhra revamp education system

New York: Andhra Pradesh is set to sign an MOU with the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology to tap its vast resources to help give the state’s educational system a face lift, the state’s information technology and communications minister Ponnala Lakshmaiah said here today. The minister said the finer details are being worked out and the memorandum of understanding (MOU) will be signed within a few months.

MIT has signed a MoU with the Andhra government. AFP.
The MOU will help tap the edX platform and open course ware of the prestigious institute located in Boston, to develop alternative learning mechanisms in the wake of serious dearth of qualified teaching professionals, Lakshmaiah said.

The proposed partnership will help Andhra’s small and rural colleges to have access to the expensive labs using the iLabs technology of the MIT. The tie-up will also help in the development of utilisation of Open Software Interface Definitions.

“The MIT faculty was pleasantly surprised to learn that Andhra Pradesh has about 700 engineering colleges and assured their cooperation in skill development,” the minister said. Lakshmaiah said the global potential of electronic hardware industry is estimated at$ 2.4 Trillion by 2020 and the demand for the Indian market that stood at $ 45 Billion is expected to touch $ 400 Billion by 2020.

To explore this market, India’s first electronic manufacturing cluster is to be set up in Hyderabad, the minister said.

PTI

India basks in solar glory

From Ladakh in the north to Madurai in the south, solar power is turning India into a hot destination for clean energy investments from across the globe.

The good news comes at a time when money flow into low-carbon economies is falling across the world. The investment is all the more welcome because India has suffered its lowest economic growth (5%) in a decade.

"The investment in clean technologies increased by 11% in 2012 in India, second largest after China," planning commission deputy chairperson Montek Singh Ahluwalia said at the recent clean energy ministerial forum in Delhi.

With around 44% of Indian villages without regular power connection and peak time power deficit of 8-10%, solar power is a viable option for policymakers. In just five years, states such as Rajasthan, Gujarat, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu, which get more than 300 days of bright sun in a year, have made the most from solar revolution. Gujarat and Rajasthan have increased their solar generation by over five times in this period, while other states have more than doubled their capacity. Around 700 million square hectares in India have solar installations.

Tarun Kapoor, joint secretary in-charge of solar mission in the ministry of new and renewable energy, said solar power could be cheaper than the conventional coal-based electricity in 2014. The generation cost of solar power has dipped from R17 per unit in 2008-09 to R6.45 in Rajasthan and R6.49 in Tamil Nadu now. It is expected to come down to Rs. 6 by the end of 2013.

The solar energy sector is also seeing a healthy competition between states. Maharashtra first came up with India's biggest solar farm of 125 MW. The record may not stand for long. Madhya Pradesh is gearing up to commission a solar station of 151 MW in August. It would not be a surprise if Gujarat upgrades its solar farm to claim the record.

Though solar energy has taken big strides in recent year, conventional thermal power will remain India's main energy source in the foreseeable future. "One of the (obvious) problems with solar energy is its unavailability in peak hours (early morning and late evenings)," said a planning commission official.

Source : HindustanTimes

The world's tiniest fisheye camera

Twenty-five year-old student Greg Dash was frustrated. He wanted to take "fisheye"-style camera pictures without having to pay for an expensive lens, or fiddle around with a smartphone app. He wanted something light and small that he could pull from his pocket at a moment's notice. Unfortunately such a device did not exist.
So, he went ahead and invented it.
Measuring just four centimeters long and two centimeters high, the "Little Cyclops" has only two buttons and no viewing screen.
However, an array of nifty features -- including a timelapse mode, 12 megapixel resolution and HD video recording capabilities -- have proven so popular with photography enthusiasts that the camera easily surpassed its funding target on the crowdsourcing website, Indiegogo.
 Silent success of BLUMOTION hinge Divine inspiration behind Post-it Notes Harvesting rubber from dandelions
The Little Cyclops had raised $100,000 as donations came to a close this morning, almost double the initial $53,000 target.
"It's all been a bit overwhelming," said Dash. "At one point I was getting an email every seven minutes and it has been just impossible to respond to everyone.
"Because the money has gone so far over the goal now though I can get other people on board to help get the cameras out," he added.
See also: The ingenious refocusing camera
Dash says he first came up with the idea for the camera late last year when he was unable to find an affordable fisheye lens to use with his own digital SLR camera.
He resolved to fashion one himself using an old camera and a lens he had custom made.
When friends were impressed with the results he decided to see if he could raise the funds to put his invention into production.
A manufacturer -- which he doesn't wish to reveal as he is still in the pre-production phase -- was then sourced to make a limited run of 1,000 devices completely from scratch which will be sold on a first-come first-served basis.
The cameras are priced at $100 each and orders have already arrived from as far afield as Japan and Taiwan.
"It's been amazing as there has been interest from everywhere really, all over the world," Dash said.
"I was even invited to go on Dragon's Den (a popular British TV show where entrepreneurs pitch their products and ideas to prominent businesspeople) but there's no way I'm going on that," he added.
See also: $30 gadget lets your eyes take control
Despite the unforeseen level of interest, Dash says he has no plans to go into the serious business of mass production any time soon.
His main priority remains studying towards a PhD on the economic and social impact of wind energy development at the University of Aberystwyth in his native Wales.
The success of Little Cyclops however has helped him pay-off mounting student fees and encouraged him to further test his powers of invention.
He now has a new limited edition camera in the pipeline which he hopes to release at the end of the summer, although he remains tight-lipped as to what exactly that may be.
"There's going to be a view finder added and a load of other features but I don't want to give away what it is yet," he said.
"It's going to be able to do something that you can't do on any smartphone and would usually cost hundreds of pounds but I can do it for about £50 ($76)."
It's been amazing as there has been interest from everywhere really, all over the world
Greg Dash
See also: Print a life-size robot for under $1,000
Dash plans to listen to feedback on the Little Cyclops before finalizing the design of his next product and crowdsourcing for funding.
For now, however, the main priority is to continue with his studies while indulging his passion for photography and camera development when he can.
"It's not a business really, just a project that I'm working on to see what we can do with cameras and have a bit of fun with them," he said.
"I really enjoy my PhD and the work that I do so if the money I make from the cameras makes that a bit easier or more comfortable for me then all the better."

Source : CNN

French Senate honours Sulabh founder with 'Legend of Planet' award

PARIS: Ahead of World Environment Day, the French Senate has honoured Indian social reformer and Sulabh movement founder Bindeshwar Pathak with the 'Legend of Planet' award for bringing about a toilet revolution in his country and for liberating manual scavenges from the inhuman practice.

Senate vice-president Chantal Jourdan decorated Pathak and five others from across the globe with the honour at a reception the at Palais du Luxembourg on Monday night.

Hundreds of environmentalists from all over the world have gathered in the city for a three-day Green Games Congress organised at Unesco headquarters in Paris to discuss burning environmental issues.

While accepting the honour, Pathak termed it a recognition of his 40 years of service for the society" "It's honour for Indi"," he said.

Pathak is the founder of Sulabh International Social Service Organisation which is spearheading a toilet revolution in India using indigenously-developed, cheaper and eco-friendly technology. The eco-friendly Sulabh Sauchalya invented by him requires only one litre of water, thus directly conserving the environment.

Pathak is known around the world for his wide-ranging work in the sanitation field to improve public health, advance social progress and improve human rights in his home nation and other countries.

The Indian sanitation expert has previously been awarded the prestigious 2009 Stockholm Water Prize. The award, akin to a Nobel Prize on environmental issues, was presented to him by Prince Carl Philip of Sweden. He was awarded with Padma Bhushan by the Indian government, besides several other international and national awards.

Source : TOI

Scientists discover vast undersea freshwater reserves

Scientists discover vast undersea freshwater reserves SYDNEY: Australian researchers said on Thursday they had established the existence ...